DETROIT - Al Alburquerque reached out and snagged a sharp grounder to the mound - then planted a little kiss on the ball before tossing it to first.

The relieved reliever gave his Detroit teammates a reason to laugh in ninth inning of a tight game. Moments later, the Tigers were celebrating.

Don Kelly scored the tying run on a wild pitch in the eighth, then hit a bases-loaded sacrifice fly in the bottom of the ninth that lifted the Tigers over the Oakland Athletics 5-4 on Sunday for a 2-0 lead in their AL Divsion Series.

Detroit overcame three A's leads. It was 1-all before a wild final three innings that included a key error by A's center fielder Coco Crisp, two game-tying wild pitches and several momentum changes.

Quirky Alburquerque

Alburquerque kept it tied in the ninth when he got Yoenis Cespedes to hit a comebacker with men on first and third and two outs. He gave the ball a quick smooch before throwing underhand to first.

"It was the emotion of the game," Alburquerque said. "I wasn't trying to be a hot dog."

"We didn't appreciate that. I thought it was immature and not very professional," Reddick said. "You don't do that on the field. Save it for the dugout."

Detroit will go for a sweep in Game 3 on Tuesday at Oakland.

Triple Crown winner Miguel Cabrera doubled twice for the Tigers, hit a fly ball that Crisp dropped for two runs, and later singled in the ninth.

It was the sixth straight postseason loss for the A's, all to Detroit. The Tigers swept Oakland in the 2006 AL Championship Series.

Omar Infante and Cabrera hit back-to-back singles off Grant Balfour with one out in the Detroit ninth. With runners on first and third, Prince Fielder was intentionally walked, bringing up Kelly, who had stayed in the game as the designated hitter after pinch-running the previous inning.

Kelly gets his pitch

"Was looking for a fastball, and I got it," Kelly said. "It's a great feeling to go out there in that situation and do that."

Kelly's fly to right was plenty deep to score Infante without a play at the plate. It was another big playoff moment for Kelly, who hit a home run last year when the Tigers beat the New York Yankees in the decisive fifth game of their Division Series.

A favorite of manager Jim Leyland, Kelly hit .186 during the regular season but made the postseason roster as a pinch-running option who can also play any position in the field.

"It takes everybody to contribute, and we got contributions from everybody," Leyland said.